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After five weeks of campaigning and a sustained political argument over the final budget impact of the Coalition's spending and savings plans, Mr Hockey will reveal his list of policy costings on the penultimate day of the campaign, promising only that the budget would be ''in excess of $6 billion'' better off in cash terms under his stewardship, and that gross debt would be $16 billion lower.

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But missing from the independent costings will be the analysis on three of the Coalition's key policies: broadband, Direct Action and the plan to stop asylum seekers coming to Australia by boat.

The reason that the Coalition has not sent these policies to the independent Parliamentary Budget Office was because the PBO will not have access to the information outside of government and because the policies have "input from a range of external sources", a spokesman for Mr Hockey confirmed.

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Instead of being costed by the PBO, those three policies would be verified by the Coalition's so-called ''eminent persons'' panel comprising former top bureaucrat Peter Shergold, economist Geoff Carmody and former Queensland auditor-general Len Scanlan.

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The three men have been locked in the Liberal Party's Melbourne campaign headquarters in recent days scouring the numbers to ensure that the errors of the last election, when Treasury found an $11 billion hole in Coalition figures, are not repeated.

The Opposition Leader left the door open to harsher cuts, should he be elected on September 7, noting that his promised Commission of Audit would ''go through the whole of the administration''.

''I'm very happy to have the Commission of Audit go through the whole of the administration, to tell us whether, in their opinion, they think things can be done better. And where things can be done better, more frugally, more prudently, with more benefit for taxpayers, surely it would be a foolish government that would ignore that,'' he said.

Mr Abbott has long pledged that if he wins Saturday's election he will set up a commission of audit similar to that commissioned by former prime minister John Howard when he took power in 1996. Labor has accused the Coalition of using the audit to hide spending cuts and policies until after the election.

Finance Minister Penny Wong attacked Mr Abbott for briefing select journalists on his costings but keeping them hidden from the Australian public.

''Today Mr Abbott was asked twice, was asked twice, whether anything would be quarantined from his post election commission of audit.

''He was asked twice and his answer was no . . . Everything is on the table.''

Shortly after Senator Wong's press conference this morning, Sky TV cut to a staged event in which Mr Hockey's panel of ''eminent Australians'' were signing off on the Coalition's costings.

The ''pic fac'' - an event staged for the cameras but where journalists are not allowed to ask questions - featured the three eminent men signing the costings and remarking about how thorough and rigorous the process was.

But less than two days before the election the costings still remain hidden from public scrutiny.

Shadow treasurer's announcement

Mr Hockey will argue on Thursday that the economy will grow faster under the Coalition, and that billions of dollars of red-tape costs could be stripped away.

The shadow treasurer's office also confirmed that a Coalition government would, as part of its proposed Commission of Audit, redirect millions of dollars of "obscure research grants" into projects deemed more worthy, such as finding cures for dementia and other diseases.

The election campaign is now into the final stretch with a ban on electronic election advertising in effect from midnight Wednesday.

With the Coalition well in front in the polls, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has admitted the election is make or break for him, telling the ABC's Kitchen Cabinet cooking show: ''I think one thing we can be absolutely certain of is that I won't be the Opposition Leader after the election.''

Labor has laid out $54.6 billion in combined deficits over the coming three years but promises to have the federal books showing a small $4.2 billion surplus in 2016-17.

Mr Hockey's refusal to outline a path to surplus is expected to bring an attack from Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, who will make his final campaign set-piece speech at the National Press Club in Canberra on Thursday.

Mr Rudd will seek to capitalise on Labor's success in steering Australia through the global financial crisis in 2008-09.

A Labor source said Mr Rudd would ''strongly defend this record against a Liberal vision of the GFC, which would have been to cut deep and look after the interests of a few''.

Mr Rudd is also expected to claim that the Coalition has big cuts planned that voters will only learn about once an audit of spending is completed.